US8138522B2 - Gate controlled atomic switch - Google Patents

Gate controlled atomic switch Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US8138522B2
US8138522B2 US13/158,023 US201113158023A US8138522B2 US 8138522 B2 US8138522 B2 US 8138522B2 US 201113158023 A US201113158023 A US 201113158023A US 8138522 B2 US8138522 B2 US 8138522B2
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
electrode
potential
contact
atomic
conductance
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Expired - Fee Related
Application number
US13/158,023
Other versions
US20110241067A1 (en
Inventor
Thomas Schimmel
Fangqing Xie
Christian Obermair
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Papst Licensing GmbH and Co KG
Original Assignee
Individual
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Individual filed Critical Individual
Priority to US13/158,023 priority Critical patent/US8138522B2/en
Publication of US20110241067A1 publication Critical patent/US20110241067A1/en
Priority to US13/398,392 priority patent/US20120211368A1/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US8138522B2 publication Critical patent/US8138522B2/en
Assigned to PAPST LICENSING GMBH CO. KG reassignment PAPST LICENSING GMBH CO. KG ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST (SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS). Assignors: SCHIMMEL, THOMAS, XIE, FANGQING, OBERMAIR, CHRISTIAN
Assigned to PAPST LICENSING GMBH CO. KG reassignment PAPST LICENSING GMBH CO. KG CORRECTIVE ASSIGNMENT TO CORRECT THE CITY FOR THE ADDRESS OF ASSIGNEE. CORRECT NAME OF THE CITY IS ST. GEORGEN. PREVIOUSLY RECORDED ON REEL 029144 FRAME 0392. ASSIGNOR(S) HEREBY CONFIRMS THE CITY NAME WAS INCORRECT AS GEORGEN, GERMANY.. Assignors: SCHIMMEL, THOMAS, XIE, FANGQING, OBERMAIR, CHRISTIAN
Expired - Fee Related legal-status Critical Current
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical

Links

Images

Classifications

    • HELECTRICITY
    • H10SEMICONDUCTOR DEVICES; ELECTRIC SOLID-STATE DEVICES NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • H10KORGANIC ELECTRIC SOLID-STATE DEVICES
    • H10K10/00Organic devices specially adapted for rectifying, amplifying, oscillating or switching; Organic capacitors or resistors having a potential-jump barrier or a surface barrier
    • H10K10/701Organic molecular electronic devices
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B82NANOTECHNOLOGY
    • B82BNANOSTRUCTURES FORMED BY MANIPULATION OF INDIVIDUAL ATOMS, MOLECULES, OR LIMITED COLLECTIONS OF ATOMS OR MOLECULES AS DISCRETE UNITS; MANUFACTURE OR TREATMENT THEREOF
    • B82B1/00Nanostructures formed by manipulation of individual atoms or molecules, or limited collections of atoms or molecules as discrete units
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B82NANOTECHNOLOGY
    • B82YSPECIFIC USES OR APPLICATIONS OF NANOSTRUCTURES; MEASUREMENT OR ANALYSIS OF NANOSTRUCTURES; MANUFACTURE OR TREATMENT OF NANOSTRUCTURES
    • B82Y10/00Nanotechnology for information processing, storage or transmission, e.g. quantum computing or single electron logic
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B82NANOTECHNOLOGY
    • B82YSPECIFIC USES OR APPLICATIONS OF NANOSTRUCTURES; MEASUREMENT OR ANALYSIS OF NANOSTRUCTURES; MANUFACTURE OR TREATMENT OF NANOSTRUCTURES
    • B82Y30/00Nanotechnology for materials or surface science, e.g. nanocomposites
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H01ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
    • H01LSEMICONDUCTOR DEVICES NOT COVERED BY CLASS H10
    • H01L29/00Semiconductor devices adapted for rectifying, amplifying, oscillating or switching, or capacitors or resistors with at least one potential-jump barrier or surface barrier, e.g. PN junction depletion layer or carrier concentration layer; Details of semiconductor bodies or of electrodes thereof  ; Multistep manufacturing processes therefor
    • H01L29/66Types of semiconductor device ; Multistep manufacturing processes therefor
    • H01L29/68Types of semiconductor device ; Multistep manufacturing processes therefor controllable by only the electric current supplied, or only the electric potential applied, to an electrode which does not carry the current to be rectified, amplified or switched
    • H01L29/76Unipolar devices, e.g. field effect transistors
    • H01L29/7613Single electron transistors; Coulomb blockade devices
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H10SEMICONDUCTOR DEVICES; ELECTRIC SOLID-STATE DEVICES NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • H10KORGANIC ELECTRIC SOLID-STATE DEVICES
    • H10K10/00Organic devices specially adapted for rectifying, amplifying, oscillating or switching; Organic capacitors or resistors having a potential-jump barrier or a surface barrier
    • H10K10/40Organic transistors
    • H10K10/46Field-effect transistors, e.g. organic thin-film transistors [OTFT]
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H10SEMICONDUCTOR DEVICES; ELECTRIC SOLID-STATE DEVICES NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • H10KORGANIC ELECTRIC SOLID-STATE DEVICES
    • H10K10/00Organic devices specially adapted for rectifying, amplifying, oscillating or switching; Organic capacitors or resistors having a potential-jump barrier or a surface barrier
    • H10K10/40Organic transistors
    • H10K10/46Field-effect transistors, e.g. organic thin-film transistors [OTFT]
    • H10K10/462Insulated gate field-effect transistors [IGFETs]
    • H10K10/466Lateral bottom-gate IGFETs comprising only a single gate
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H10SEMICONDUCTOR DEVICES; ELECTRIC SOLID-STATE DEVICES NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • H10KORGANIC ELECTRIC SOLID-STATE DEVICES
    • H10K10/00Organic devices specially adapted for rectifying, amplifying, oscillating or switching; Organic capacitors or resistors having a potential-jump barrier or a surface barrier
    • H10K10/50Bistable switching devices
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H10SEMICONDUCTOR DEVICES; ELECTRIC SOLID-STATE DEVICES NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • H10NELECTRIC SOLID-STATE DEVICES NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • H10N99/00Subject matter not provided for in other groups of this subclass
    • H10N99/05Quantum devices, e.g. quantum interference devices, metal single electron transistors
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H10SEMICONDUCTOR DEVICES; ELECTRIC SOLID-STATE DEVICES NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • H10KORGANIC ELECTRIC SOLID-STATE DEVICES
    • H10K71/00Manufacture or treatment specially adapted for the organic devices covered by this subclass
    • H10K71/10Deposition of organic active material
    • H10K71/12Deposition of organic active material using liquid deposition, e.g. spin coating
    • H10K71/125Deposition of organic active material using liquid deposition, e.g. spin coating using electrolytic deposition e.g. in-situ electropolymerisation

Definitions

  • microelectronics The development in microelectronics is characterized by an increasing miniaturization. In addition to a miniaturization of dimensions of individual components, in particular of transistors and the transition to increasing frequencies [1, 2] also the reduction of energy consumption per logic operation comes increasingly to the fore. In semiconductor structures of processors and memory chips which are nowadays produced the dimensions of the individual components of a microchip are already less than 100 nanometers with the purpose of further miniaturization. While the semiconductor technology is still based on silicon based systems to a large extent, for nanoscale-electronics alternative systems are also discussed more frequently, in particular the design of logic elements such as switches and transistors based on individual molecules (so-called molecular electronics) [3, 4, 5].
  • a component on an atomic scale in which a source-drain resistance specifically will be controlled by an independent third electrode, the gate electrode, and for instance can be specifically controlled/switched by means of the variation of a potential applied on the gate electrode between an electrically conducting on-state and a electrically less conducting or ideally non-conducting off-state.
  • the group of Don Eigler [14] succeeded in switching the position of a single atom in a tunneling microscope between two positions (on the tip of the tunnel and on the surface of the sample).
  • This atom flip-flop has not only the disadvantage that it operates in the shown configuration only at low temperatures (typically at 4 K up to 30 K) and in ultra high vacuum, that is, not under conditions where in technical applications electronic relays operate.
  • there is also no independent third electrode as a control electrode or gate available instead the switching of the atom position of the movable atom is achieved by applying a potential to both electrodes the conductance value of which has to be switched.
  • this arrangement does not allow to open and close an electrical circuit, but the resistance of the contact typically varies between 0% and 40% due to the switching of the position of the atom, whereby this percentage of variation cannot be predicted exactly.
  • a different relay element has been described by Fuchs and Schimmel [15, 16] with a switching process on an atomic scale. Unlike the above described device, in this element the switching process can also be carried out under ambient conditions, i.e. at room temperature and in air, i.e. without the necessity of vacuum or exclusion of oxygen. However, there is mainly a positional switching. Switching of an electrical tunnel current between a higher and a lower value can also only be observed if a tunnelling microscope is used. The tunnel current cannot be switched on and off by means of the atomic element.
  • this problem is solved as a atomic switching element has been designed, the only moveable elements of which are the contacting atoms and the electrical contact of which between two electrodes (which are called source and drain) can be specifically opened and closed by means of an potential which is applied to an independent third electrode (control potential).
  • This component operates at room temperature and without exclusion of oxygen.
  • the ratio of the source drain-conductance in the on and off-state can be more than 1000, and according to the embodiment more than 10,000.
  • a dissolution potential V2 will be applied to both of the electrodes with respect to the reference electrode (it may be but need not be carried out, for instance, not be varying the potential of both of the gold electrodes, but through varying the potential of the quasi reference electrode with respect to a reference potential “ground”), until the conductance value falls short of a lower conductance value Y, and then a deposition potential V1t will be applied again until in the contact the upper conductance value is reached and the cycle of applying the dissolution potential V2 starts again.
  • This procedure will be repeated until by this training of the contact as a response to applying a dissolution potential to the working electrode with respect to the reference electrode (the potential of the working electrode has a positive bias relative to the reference electrode) the conductance value of the contact with or without a delay jumps to the value “zero” and by applying a deposition potential (the potential of the working electrode has a negative bias relative to the reference electrode) the conductance value of the source drain-contact with or without a delay jumps to the intended value G.
  • the described procedure is working in an especially advantageous manner, when the intended on-state-conductance value G is a multiple of the conductance quantum.
  • a hold-potential i.e. a value of the potential which is between deposition and dissolution potential
  • a given conductance value (on-state or off-state) can subsequently be hold constant as long as by changing the potential it will specifically be switched via the deposition potential from the off-state to the on-state or via the dissolution potential from the on-state to the off-state.
  • This component is an atomic switch or an atomic relay which can be used as a functional unit for atomic logic switches and logic chips as well as for atomic electronics.
  • this procedure cannot only be used for fabricating and operating of atomic switches and atomic transistors but also for fabricating of a resistor with a pre-selectable value, i.e. with a given value defined before fabrication, which may be preferably an integer multiple of the conductance quantum.
  • FIG. 1( a ) is an illustration of the fundamental principal of a metal quantum point contact based switching on an atomic scale.
  • the contacting atoms are moved back and forth by an externally applied gate potential resulting in a gate potential controlled closing and separating of the contact on an atomic scale.
  • FIG. 1( b ) schematically shows the experimental set-up.
  • a gate potential controlled electrochemical deposition potential silver is electrochemically deposited into the nano-scale gap between the gold electrodes (source and drain), while at the same time the conductance is recorded between the gold electrodes by a measuring voltage typically of 12.9 mV.
  • a measuring voltage typically of 12.9 mV By repeated computer-controlled electrochemical cycling a bi-stable switch on an atomic scale is generated.
  • FIG. 2 Switching of the conductance value by means of a control potential U control by varying the control potential (a) the conductance value of the atomic silver contact (b) is switched between a non-conducting off-state and an on-state having a quantized conductance value of 1 G 0 .
  • the curves are the non-filtered measuring data and show a sharp transition between these two states. This experiment illustrates an atomic switch which is externally controlled by a control potential.
  • FIG. 3 Time-dependence of the switching process: the figure shows the declining edge of the conductance value as a function of time during the dissolution process of the atomic silver contact. This section is a part of a longer sequence of periodic switch processes between the conductance values of zero and 2 G 0 .
  • the switching process starts with a pre-phase of about 50 ⁇ s which is followed by the intrinsic switching process within a time period of less than 14 ⁇ s.
  • FIG. 4 shows the switching of the conductance value between zero and a pre-selected higher conductance value of 3 G 0 .
  • the conductance value of the atomic switch (b) is directly controlled by means of the control potential U control (a) which is applied between the electrochemical control electrode and the gold working electrodes. If the control potential is put to a “halt-level” (see arrows), the atomic switch steadily remains on its conductance level.
  • FIG. 1 schematically shows the measuring set-up for electrochemical deposition of atomic metallic contacts.
  • an electrochemical cell filled with an electrolyte of metallic ions and equipped with potentiostatically controlled electrodes.
  • Two gold electrodes which serve as working electrodes are fixed to a glass substrate and are electrically insulated by a distance between each other of about 100 nm. Both of the gold electrodes are insulated against the electrolyte by means of a polymer coating except for a microscopic area of the contact region.
  • metal islands in the present embodiment silver islands
  • the conductance between the working electrodes will be recorded. This will be carried out as long as two metal islands which have grown on two different gold electrodes come into contact to each other and will close the gap between both of the gold electrodes in an electrically conducting manner.
  • a positive control potential between 2 mV and 40 mV will be applied to the quasi-reference electrode; this will correspond to a deposition potential between ⁇ 2 mV and ⁇ 40 mV (each vs. Ag/Ag + ) at one of the working electrodes [here it is called gold electrode ( 1 )].
  • the other working electrode which is called gold electrode ( 2 ) is constantly on a potential which is lowered with U measur as compared to the gold electrode ( 1 ).
  • electrochemically deposited atomic silver point contacts having quantized conductance values can be generated.
  • the measurements are carried out at room temperature.
  • the conductance value of the atomic silver contact was ca. 1 G 0 .
  • the conductance value jumps to the value of zero.
  • FIG. 2 shows an embodiment for a sequence of five switching processes of an atomic switch which was generated by the above described procedure.
  • the atomic silver contact switches between an off-state having a conductance value of zero and an on-state having a conductance value of 1 G 0 and is controlled by applying an external electrochemical control potential.
  • This control potential is shown as a function of time in FIG. 2( a ), while FIG. 2( b ) shows the simultaneously measured conductance value.
  • Each change of the control potential is followed by a switching of the conductance value of the atomic silver contact.
  • the individual switching processes occur in a very reproducible manner.
  • more than 1000 control potential controlled switching processes between the conductance value of zero and G 0 could be observed.
  • such switches with several different switches could be reproduced.
  • an accuracy of reproduction of 0.8% (standard deviation) is obtained of the conductance values, which are achieved in the individual switching processes.
  • the noise of the quantized on-state is less than 0.4%.
  • the deviation of the mean value of the measured conductance from the theoretically predicted value of 1 G 0 is only 1.0%.
  • the ratio of conductance values of the on- and off-state is limited in such a manner that the conductance value of the off-state is not exactly zero due to electrochemical leakage currents.
  • the intrinsic switching time of the transition is substantially shorter, as FIG. 3 shows.
  • the declining edge of a switching process of a reproducible sequence of transitions between the conductance value of zero and the conductance value of 2 G 0 is shown with a time resolution in the ⁇ s-range. Initially the conductance value runs almost constantly at 2 G 0 .
  • the real switching process starts in a pre-phase of about 50 ⁇ s (t 0 in FIG. 3 ) during which the conductance value drops to about 1.7 G 0 and then the real switching process (t 1 ) occurs.
  • FIG. 4 A further embodiment is shown in FIG. 4 : What is crucial is the choice of the upper threshold value for the cycles of electrochemical deposition and dissolution of the contact. If for instance a switch is to be generated between the values of zero and 3 G 0 , an upper threshold value of almost 3 G 0 has to be chosen. As a consequence of the training process a contact is formed the conductance value of which will be switchable between the values of zero and 3 G 0 by means of an external control potential (see FIG. 4 ). The shape of the signal, with which the control potential is applied as a function of time (in this case the shape of a triangle) has no influence on the switching operation of the conductance value which proceeds between two values in a digital manner.
  • FIG. 4 shows a further possibility to interrupt the periodic switch process and to keep constant a defined conductance level.
  • a halt-potential in the present case ⁇ 14 mV
  • This potential has the effect that locally no further electrochemical deposition of atoms or dissolution of the atomic contact occurs and thus the conductance value remains constant as a function of time.
  • FIG. 4 shows this behaviour of the off-state (arrow on the left) and of the on-state (arrow to the right).
  • the atomic switch can therefore by means of controlling by the control potential operate in three different modes: Switching on the current, switching off the current, keeping the at last adopted state. Such a switch is therefore the basis of logic switch elements on an atomic scale.

Abstract

The invention relates to a method for producing a switch element. The invention is characterized in that the switch element comprises three electrodes that are located in an electrolyte, two of which (source electrode and drain electrode) are interconnected by a bridge consisting of one or more atoms that can be reversibly opened and closed. The opening and closing of said contact between the source and drain electrodes can be controlled by the potential that is applied to the third electrode (gate electrode). The switch element is produced by the repeated application of potential cycles between the gate electrode and the source or drain electrode. The potential is increased and reduced during the potential cycles until the conductance between the source and drain electrode can be switched back and forth between two conductances, as a result of said change in potential in the gate electrode, as a reproducible function of the voltage of the gate electrode.

Description

RELATED APPLICATIONS
This application is a continuation of U.S. application Ser. No. 11/991391 which is International Application PCT/DE2005/001541, which claims priority to German Application No. 10 2004 043 811.0, all of which applications are incorporated herein by reference.
FEDERALLY SPONSORED RESEARCH OR DEVELOPMENT
Not Applicable
MICROFICHE/COPYRIGHT REFERENCE
Not Applicable
STATE OF THE ART AND PRESENTATION OF THE PROBLEM
The development in microelectronics is characterized by an increasing miniaturization. In addition to a miniaturization of dimensions of individual components, in particular of transistors and the transition to increasing frequencies [1, 2] also the reduction of energy consumption per logic operation comes increasingly to the fore. In semiconductor structures of processors and memory chips which are nowadays produced the dimensions of the individual components of a microchip are already less than 100 nanometers with the purpose of further miniaturization. While the semiconductor technology is still based on silicon based systems to a large extent, for nanoscale-electronics alternative systems are also discussed more frequently, in particular the design of logic elements such as switches and transistors based on individual molecules (so-called molecular electronics) [3, 4, 5].
There has been hardly any discussion on the possibility of the design of electronic circuits based on components, the active structural unit of which are not individual molecular structures (partly special and partly complex), but individual atoms, for example metal atoms (“atomic electronics”). While in the case of molecular electronics there are a large number of proposed concepts but also of experimental implementations already available, there is not yet a concept for atomic electronics. While passive components such as capacitors and resistors on an atomic scale have been implemented and investigated experimentally as prototypes for a long time, atomic electronics has failed so far on the implementation of an atomic transistor, i.e. a component on an atomic scale, in which a source-drain resistance specifically will be controlled by an independent third electrode, the gate electrode, and for instance can be specifically controlled/switched by means of the variation of a potential applied on the gate electrode between an electrically conducting on-state and a electrically less conducting or ideally non-conducting off-state.
On the other side, considerable preliminary research has already been done on the fabrication of contacts between individual atoms [6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12], which is achieved in a mechanical way, whereby thin metallic bridges will be stretched out to such an extent that the contact area will be made up of a single or a few atoms in diameter. In this process, in particular mechanically controllable break contacts (Mechanically Controllable Break Junctions, MCB) and the contact between the metallic tip of a scanning tunnel microscope and a metallic sample have been used, but also contacts in relays and others have been investigated. It could also been demonstrated that metallic point contacts on an atomic scale can be established by means of galvanic deposition of metals from an electrolyte into a small gap between two electrically conducting contacts [10, 11, 12]. While such contacts frequently but not always turn out to be quantum point contacts having conductance values of integer multiples of the conductance quantum, their conductance values, which they adapt, can hardly be predetermined or adjusted beforehand on a predefined value. In fact, the conductance value of the metallic bridge is decreasing when its diameter is decreasing successively, mostly in several stages, until the bridge is breaking. The essential problem of the implementation of atomic or molecular electronics, i.e. the implementation of active components which made it possible by means of an independent third control electrode to control and adjust specifically the conductance value between source and drain electrode, is not yet solved therewith.
In the past there had been two approaches for solving this problem. As for one approach, an atomic contact was repeatedly opened and closed while two macroscopic electrodes were moved towards one another and afterwards moved away from another [13]. In this process without any doubt the contact on an atomic scale was established, however, the opening and closing of the contact required the movement of a macroscopic electrode.
As for the second approach, the group of Don Eigler [14] succeeded in switching the position of a single atom in a tunneling microscope between two positions (on the tip of the tunnel and on the surface of the sample). In this case there is a component the only movable or moved part of which is a single atom. This atom flip-flop has not only the disadvantage that it operates in the shown configuration only at low temperatures (typically at 4 K up to 30 K) and in ultra high vacuum, that is, not under conditions where in technical applications electronic relays operate. Moreover, there is also no independent third electrode as a control electrode or gate available, instead the switching of the atom position of the movable atom is achieved by applying a potential to both electrodes the conductance value of which has to be switched. However, first and foremost, this arrangement does not allow to open and close an electrical circuit, but the resistance of the contact typically varies between 0% and 40% due to the switching of the position of the atom, whereby this percentage of variation cannot be predicted exactly.
A different relay element has been described by Fuchs and Schimmel [15, 16] with a switching process on an atomic scale. Unlike the above described device, in this element the switching process can also be carried out under ambient conditions, i.e. at room temperature and in air, i.e. without the necessity of vacuum or exclusion of oxygen. However, there is mainly a positional switching. Switching of an electrical tunnel current between a higher and a lower value can also only be observed if a tunnelling microscope is used. The tunnel current cannot be switched on and off by means of the atomic element.
EXPLANATION OF THE PROCEDURE AND OF THE COMPONENT ACCORDING TO THE INVENTION
By the procedure according to the invention this problem is solved as a atomic switching element has been designed, the only moveable elements of which are the contacting atoms and the electrical contact of which between two electrodes (which are called source and drain) can be specifically opened and closed by means of an potential which is applied to an independent third electrode (control potential). This component operates at room temperature and without exclusion of oxygen. The ratio of the source drain-conductance in the on and off-state can be more than 1000, and according to the embodiment more than 10,000.
The fundamental idea of the process according to the invention is the training of an electrochemically produced atomic point contact by repeated cycling in the following manner:
At first in a small gap between two electrodes metal will be deposited galvanically from an electrolyte until the contact between both of the electrodes is closed and a pre-adjusted upper conductance value is exceeded. Afterwards immediately or after a defined delay a dissolution potential V2 will be applied to both of the electrodes with respect to the reference electrode (it may be but need not be carried out, for instance, not be varying the potential of both of the gold electrodes, but through varying the potential of the quasi reference electrode with respect to a reference potential “ground”), until the conductance value falls short of a lower conductance value Y, and then a deposition potential V1t will be applied again until in the contact the upper conductance value is reached and the cycle of applying the dissolution potential V2 starts again.
This procedure will be repeated until by this training of the contact as a response to applying a dissolution potential to the working electrode with respect to the reference electrode (the potential of the working electrode has a positive bias relative to the reference electrode) the conductance value of the contact with or without a delay jumps to the value “zero” and by applying a deposition potential (the potential of the working electrode has a negative bias relative to the reference electrode) the conductance value of the source drain-contact with or without a delay jumps to the intended value G. The described procedure is working in an especially advantageous manner, when the intended on-state-conductance value G is a multiple of the conductance quantum.
By means of a hold-potential, i.e. a value of the potential which is between deposition and dissolution potential, a given conductance value (on-state or off-state) can subsequently be hold constant as long as by changing the potential it will specifically be switched via the deposition potential from the off-state to the on-state or via the dissolution potential from the on-state to the off-state.
Thus the function of a transistor or of a relay on an atomic scale can be implemented. This component is an atomic switch or an atomic relay which can be used as a functional unit for atomic logic switches and logic chips as well as for atomic electronics.
After setting a defined on-state and then setting the cycling and switching and applying a hold-potential only (the value of which may generally also be different for holding the on-state and holding the off-state, see the embodiment described below as an example) this procedure cannot only be used for fabricating and operating of atomic switches and atomic transistors but also for fabricating of a resistor with a pre-selectable value, i.e. with a given value defined before fabrication, which may be preferably an integer multiple of the conductance quantum.
An embodiment of the above described application will be described below. Further embodiments will be described in appendix 1, appendix 2 and appendix 3.
The present invention will be explained further in detail with respect to the following embodiments but is not restricted to them.
FIGURE LEGENDS
FIG. 1( a) is an illustration of the fundamental principal of a metal quantum point contact based switching on an atomic scale. The contacting atoms are moved back and forth by an externally applied gate potential resulting in a gate potential controlled closing and separating of the contact on an atomic scale.
FIG. 1( b) schematically shows the experimental set-up. In this embodiment by applying a gate potential controlled electrochemical deposition potential silver is electrochemically deposited into the nano-scale gap between the gold electrodes (source and drain), while at the same time the conductance is recorded between the gold electrodes by a measuring voltage typically of 12.9 mV. By repeated computer-controlled electrochemical cycling a bi-stable switch on an atomic scale is generated.
FIG. 2: Switching of the conductance value by means of a control potential Ucontrol by varying the control potential (a) the conductance value of the atomic silver contact (b) is switched between a non-conducting off-state and an on-state having a quantized conductance value of 1 G0. The curves are the non-filtered measuring data and show a sharp transition between these two states. This experiment illustrates an atomic switch which is externally controlled by a control potential.
FIG. 3: Time-dependence of the switching process: the figure shows the declining edge of the conductance value as a function of time during the dissolution process of the atomic silver contact. This section is a part of a longer sequence of periodic switch processes between the conductance values of zero and 2 G0. The switching process starts with a pre-phase of about 50 μs which is followed by the intrinsic switching process within a time period of less than 14 μs.
FIG. 4 shows the switching of the conductance value between zero and a pre-selected higher conductance value of 3 G0. The conductance value of the atomic switch (b) is directly controlled by means of the control potential Ucontrol (a) which is applied between the electrochemical control electrode and the gold working electrodes. If the control potential is put to a “halt-level” (see arrows), the atomic switch steadily remains on its conductance level.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE EMBODIMENT
1 Experimental Set-up/Preparation
1.1 Measuring Set-up
FIG. 1 schematically shows the measuring set-up for electrochemical deposition of atomic metallic contacts. There is an electrochemical cell filled with an electrolyte of metallic ions and equipped with potentiostatically controlled electrodes. Two gold electrodes which serve as working electrodes are fixed to a glass substrate and are electrically insulated by a distance between each other of about 100 nm. Both of the gold electrodes are insulated against the electrolyte by means of a polymer coating except for a microscopic area of the contact region.
By applying an electrochemical potential difference between both of the working electrodes and a quasi-reference electrode metal islands (in the present embodiment silver islands) will be deposited on the free area of the gold electrodes. At the same time the conductance between the working electrodes will be recorded. This will be carried out as long as two metal islands which have grown on two different gold electrodes come into contact to each other and will close the gap between both of the gold electrodes in an electrically conducting manner.
1.2 Electrochemical System for Deposition of Silver
For the electrochemical deposition of atomic contacts of silver an electrolyte of an aqueous silver nitrate solution (0.1 mM AgNO3+0.1 M HNO3 dissolved in bi-distilled water) was used. Silver wires of 0.25 mm in diameter with 99.9985% purity serve as quasi-reference electrode and counter electrode.
1.3 Electrochemical Deposition of Atomic Silver Contacts
In order to deposit silver a positive control potential between 2 mV and 40 mV will be applied to the quasi-reference electrode; this will correspond to a deposition potential between −2 mV and −40 mV (each vs. Ag/Ag+) at one of the working electrodes [here it is called gold electrode (1)]. The other working electrode which is called gold electrode (2) is constantly on a potential which is lowered with Umeasur as compared to the gold electrode (1).
In this embodiment a measurement potential Umeasur of −12.9 mV was applied. This means that the deposition potential of the gold electrode (2) is 12.9 mV lower than the deposition potential of the gold electrode (1): as the deposition potential of the gold electrode (2) has a negative bias to the electrode (1), tendentially more silver will be deposited on (2).
In order to generate atomic contacts now through applying a positive control potential—that corresponds to applying a deposition potential to the working electrodes—silver will be deposited on both of the electrodes as long as two silver islands get in contact to each other and these islands connect both of the gold electrodes in a conducting manner. This will be checked by a continuous measurement of the conductance value between both of the gold electrodes during the process of deposition of silver. By means of a specially developed computer program the deposition at a given conductance value can be stopped or the contact can be separated by application of a negative control application—that corresponds to applying a dissolution potential to the gold electrodes.
In this manner electrochemically deposited atomic silver point contacts having quantized conductance values can be generated. The measurements are carried out at room temperature. The conductance value of the atomic silver contact was ca. 1 G0. After the deposition of the silver contact the control potential was lowered to −29 mV. [For the sake of clarification, this corresponds to an electrochemical dissolution potential of +29 mV vs. Ag/Ag+ of the gold electrode (1) or of (+29 mV−12.9 mV=16.1 mV) vs. Ag/Ag+ of the gold electrode (2)]. As a consequence of the separation of the contact the conductance value jumps to the value of zero.
After increasing the control potential to +2 mV silver was deposited again on the working electrodes as long as a new contact had been generated and thus the conductance value increased again to the value of 1 G0. Afterwards the deposition was stopped. The deviation of the measured conductance value from the exact value of G0=2e2/h was less than 1% in this case.
2 Atomic Switching
2.1 Specific Atomic Switching
“Training” of Contact Configurations by Cycling
In order to generate bi-stable contacts a procedure was used where an atomic contact was “trained” by several cycles of electrochemical deposition and dissolution, i.e. different contact configurations are generated until a bi-stable configuration appears. For this purpose a computer program was developed by which the corresponding parameters can be pre-selected and the cycling process can be carried out automatically.
In the following an example will be described for generating a switch between the conductance value of zero and 1 G0. At first an atomic contact was deposited. As soon as the conductance value had reached an upper threshold (in the present case 0.94 G0) which was close to the desired conductance value of the on-state (1 G0) the deposition was stopped and the following computer-controlled cycle was started: by applying a control potential for the dissolution process the contact was separated until the conductance value dropped to a lower limit (off-state, in the present case 0.05 G0). Then a control potential for deposition was applied again until the conductance value exceeded the upper threshold. Afterwards a new dissolution/deposition-cycle was started, and so on.
During the first dissolution/deposition-cycles of a contact which is just being generated anew often fluctuations of the conductance values occur during the different cycles. Normally in the course of time a transition occurs spontaneously from an irregular fluctuation of the conductance value to a control potential controlled switching between two levels (in the present case between the value of zero and the value of 1 G0).
Periodic Switching
FIG. 2 shows an embodiment for a sequence of five switching processes of an atomic switch which was generated by the above described procedure. The atomic silver contact switches between an off-state having a conductance value of zero and an on-state having a conductance value of 1 G0 and is controlled by applying an external electrochemical control potential. This control potential is shown as a function of time in FIG. 2( a), while FIG. 2( b) shows the simultaneously measured conductance value. Each change of the control potential is followed by a switching of the conductance value of the atomic silver contact.
The individual switching processes occur in a very reproducible manner. In the case of the switch shown in FIG. 2 more than 1000 control potential controlled switching processes between the conductance value of zero and G0 could be observed. Furthermore, such switches with several different switches could be reproduced. If 1000 switching processes are evaluated, an accuracy of reproduction of 0.8% (standard deviation) is obtained of the conductance values, which are achieved in the individual switching processes. The noise of the quantized on-state is less than 0.4%. The deviation of the mean value of the measured conductance from the theoretically predicted value of 1 G0 is only 1.0%. The ratio of conductance values of the on- and off-state is limited in such a manner that the conductance value of the off-state is not exactly zero due to electrochemical leakage currents. Depending on the individual configuration of the contact typical ratios between 1000 and 3000 are achieved. The intrinsic switching process of the conductance value does not occur immediately after applying the control potential, but there is a certain delay between the change of the control potential and its effect on the contact. This characteristic time depends on the contact geometry and the ion concentration of the electrolyte and is some seconds for the present experimental set-up.
The intrinsic switching time of the transition, however, is substantially shorter, as FIG. 3 shows. The declining edge of a switching process of a reproducible sequence of transitions between the conductance value of zero and the conductance value of 2 G0 is shown with a time resolution in the μs-range. Initially the conductance value runs almost constantly at 2 G0. The real switching process starts in a pre-phase of about 50 μs (t0 in FIG. 3) during which the conductance value drops to about 1.7 G0 and then the real switching process (t1) occurs.
For the time of the real switching process (t1 in FIG. 3) only an upper limit of 14 μs can be reported due to the low time resolution of the measuring electronics. In further experiments with improved electronics switching processes with a time period of ≦3 μs could be observed. This measured time period, however, is still limited by a time resolution which is still too small. The intrinsic switching velocity may be much higher, as—contrary to other procedures—the only movable parts of the switch are individual atoms and therefore the physical limits of the switching frequencies are in the Tera-Hertz range [17].
Specific Controlling
By means of the just described method of training of an atomic switch configuration not only switches can be produced having conductance values between zero an 1 G0, but also switching processes can be generated between conductance values of zero and other selectable integer multiples of G0. A section of such a generated contact, which switches between the values of zero and 2 G0 was already shown in FIG. 3.
A further embodiment is shown in FIG. 4: What is crucial is the choice of the upper threshold value for the cycles of electrochemical deposition and dissolution of the contact. If for instance a switch is to be generated between the values of zero and 3 G0, an upper threshold value of almost 3 G0 has to be chosen. As a consequence of the training process a contact is formed the conductance value of which will be switchable between the values of zero and 3 G0 by means of an external control potential (see FIG. 4). The shape of the signal, with which the control potential is applied as a function of time (in this case the shape of a triangle) has no influence on the switching operation of the conductance value which proceeds between two values in a digital manner.
FIG. 4 shows a further possibility to interrupt the periodic switch process and to keep constant a defined conductance level. For this purpose a halt-potential (in the present case −14 mV) is applied, which is chosen in such a manner that at the contact a local electrochemical equilibrium potential is established. This potential has the effect that locally no further electrochemical deposition of atoms or dissolution of the atomic contact occurs and thus the conductance value remains constant as a function of time. FIG. 4 shows this behaviour of the off-state (arrow on the left) and of the on-state (arrow to the right). The atomic switch can therefore by means of controlling by the control potential operate in three different modes: Switching on the current, switching off the current, keeping the at last adopted state. Such a switch is therefore the basis of logic switch elements on an atomic scale.
2.2 Summary of the Experiments for a Bi-stable Switching
Along with the presentation of embodiments a procedure was described for production of a bi-stable atomic switch by means of cycles of electrochemical deposition and dissolution between two threshold values of conductance. These embodiments represent the first atomic switches which are controlled by an external control electrode and in which the only movable elements are individual atoms.

Claims (7)

The invention claimed is:
1. A switching element comprising three electrodes: a source electrode, a drain electrode and a gate electrode, said source electrode and said drain electrode being connected to each other by means of a bridge made up of one or several atoms which can be reversibly opened and closed; the opening and closing of the contact between said source electrode and said drain electrode being controllable by a potential applied to said gate electrode.
2. A switching element according to claim 1 wherein said bridge is electrically conducting in an on-state at its narrowest point comprising at least one atom and less than a few atoms, whereby an electrical circuit can be opened or closed through the change of the position of said at least one atom and less than a few atoms in the contact area.
3. A switch element according to claim 1 wherein the electrical conductance of said bridge is settable on a pre-selected value.
4. A switching element according to claim 1 wherein the only movable parts of which are the atoms which connect said source electrode and said drain electrode.
5. A switching element according to claim 1 wherein the only movable part of which is a single atom which connects said source electrode and said drain electrode.
6. A switching element according to claim 1 and further including two or more different metals galvanically deposited into a gap between said source electrode and said drain electrode.
7. A switch comprising three electrodes: a source electrode, a drain electrode and a gate electrode, said source electrode and said drain electrode being connected to each other by means of a bridge made up of one or several atoms which can be reversibly opened and closed; the opening and closing of the contact between said source electrode and said drain electrode being controllable by a potential applied to said gate electrode; and an electrolyte receiving said switching element.
US13/158,023 2004-09-08 2011-06-10 Gate controlled atomic switch Expired - Fee Related US8138522B2 (en)

Priority Applications (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US13/158,023 US8138522B2 (en) 2004-09-08 2011-06-10 Gate controlled atomic switch
US13/398,392 US20120211368A1 (en) 2004-09-08 2012-02-16 Gate Controlled Atomic Switch

Applications Claiming Priority (6)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
DE102004043811.0 2004-09-08
DE102004043811 2004-09-08
DE102004043811 2004-09-08
PCT/DE2005/001541 WO2006026961A2 (en) 2004-09-08 2005-09-02 Gate-controlled atomic switch
US99139108A 2008-03-03 2008-03-03
US13/158,023 US8138522B2 (en) 2004-09-08 2011-06-10 Gate controlled atomic switch

Related Parent Applications (3)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
PCT/DE2005/001541 Continuation WO2006026961A2 (en) 2004-09-08 2005-09-02 Gate-controlled atomic switch
US11/991,391 Continuation US7960217B2 (en) 2004-09-08 2005-09-02 Gate controlled atomic switch
US99139108A Continuation 2004-09-08 2008-03-03

Related Child Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US13/398,392 Continuation US20120211368A1 (en) 2004-09-08 2012-02-16 Gate Controlled Atomic Switch

Publications (2)

Publication Number Publication Date
US20110241067A1 US20110241067A1 (en) 2011-10-06
US8138522B2 true US8138522B2 (en) 2012-03-20

Family

ID=35637145

Family Applications (3)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US11/991,391 Active 2027-10-14 US7960217B2 (en) 2004-09-08 2005-09-02 Gate controlled atomic switch
US13/158,023 Expired - Fee Related US8138522B2 (en) 2004-09-08 2011-06-10 Gate controlled atomic switch
US13/398,392 Abandoned US20120211368A1 (en) 2004-09-08 2012-02-16 Gate Controlled Atomic Switch

Family Applications Before (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US11/991,391 Active 2027-10-14 US7960217B2 (en) 2004-09-08 2005-09-02 Gate controlled atomic switch

Family Applications After (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US13/398,392 Abandoned US20120211368A1 (en) 2004-09-08 2012-02-16 Gate Controlled Atomic Switch

Country Status (4)

Country Link
US (3) US7960217B2 (en)
EP (1) EP1902311A2 (en)
DE (1) DE102005041648A1 (en)
WO (1) WO2006026961A2 (en)

Families Citing this family (13)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
GB0416600D0 (en) * 2004-07-24 2004-08-25 Univ Newcastle A process for manufacturing micro- and nano-devices
EP1902311A2 (en) * 2004-09-08 2008-03-26 Forschungszentrum Karlsruhe GmbH Gate-controlled atomic switch
WO2013016283A1 (en) * 2011-07-22 2013-01-31 Virginia Tech Intellectual Properties, Inc. Volatile/non-volatile floating electrode logic/memory cell
US8737114B2 (en) 2012-05-07 2014-05-27 Micron Technology, Inc. Switching device structures and methods
CN102903848B (en) * 2012-10-24 2015-02-18 东北大学 Preparation method of addressable nano molecular junction
DE102014111164A1 (en) 2014-01-12 2015-07-16 Karlsruher Institut für Technologie Use of a switching element on the atomic scale as a stand-by circuit
CN107996004B (en) * 2015-06-03 2021-10-22 巴登沃特姆伯格基础有限公司 Optical device and use of such a device
WO2016193361A1 (en) 2015-06-04 2016-12-08 Eth Zurich Devices, in particular optical or electro-optical devices with quantized operation
WO2018012868A1 (en) * 2016-07-12 2018-01-18 한양대학교 산학협력단 Switching atomic transistor and method for operating same
SG10201606137YA (en) * 2016-07-26 2018-02-27 Silicon Storage Tech Inc Current forming of resistive random access memory (rram) cell filament
CN112047296B (en) * 2020-09-18 2022-07-29 南开大学 Method for realizing bidirectional atomic switch by thermal expansion of light-operated substrate
EP4210112A1 (en) 2022-01-10 2023-07-12 Karlsruher Institut für Technologie Fully metallic atomic-scale tin transistors with ultralow power dissipation
CN114421943B (en) * 2022-01-25 2023-03-24 中国电子科技集团公司第五十八研究所 High-reliability anti-radiation atomic switch type configuration unit structure

Citations (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US7960217B2 (en) * 2004-09-08 2011-06-14 Thomas Schimmel Gate controlled atomic switch

Family Cites Families (6)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4717673A (en) * 1984-11-23 1988-01-05 Massachusetts Institute Of Technology Microelectrochemical devices
US5536947A (en) * 1991-01-18 1996-07-16 Energy Conversion Devices, Inc. Electrically erasable, directly overwritable, multibit single cell memory element and arrays fabricated therefrom
KR100751736B1 (en) * 2000-11-01 2007-08-27 도꾸리쯔교세이호징 가가꾸 기쥬쯔 신꼬 기꼬 Point contact array, not circuit, and electronic circuit using the same
US6410934B1 (en) * 2001-02-09 2002-06-25 The Board Of Trustees Of The University Of Illinois Silicon nanoparticle electronic switches
WO2003028124A1 (en) * 2001-09-25 2003-04-03 Japan Science And Technology Agency Electric device comprising solid electrolyte
US7876795B2 (en) * 2004-08-19 2011-01-25 Maxion Technologies, Inc. Semiconductor light source with electrically tunable emission wavelength

Patent Citations (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US7960217B2 (en) * 2004-09-08 2011-06-14 Thomas Schimmel Gate controlled atomic switch

Non-Patent Citations (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Title
F. Xie, C. Obermair, T. Schimmel, Solid State Communication, vol. 132 (2004) pp. 437-442. *

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
US20120211368A1 (en) 2012-08-23
EP1902311A2 (en) 2008-03-26
US20110241067A1 (en) 2011-10-06
WO2006026961A2 (en) 2006-03-16
DE102005041648A1 (en) 2006-07-27
US7960217B2 (en) 2011-06-14
WO2006026961A3 (en) 2008-02-21
US20090195300A1 (en) 2009-08-06

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US8138522B2 (en) Gate controlled atomic switch
US7763158B2 (en) Method for making a tunable cantilever device
US7750332B2 (en) Solid electrolyte switching device, FPGA using same, memory device, and method for manufacturing solid electrolyte switching device
US7116573B2 (en) Switching element method of driving switching element rewritable logic integrated circuit and memory
Morpurgo et al. Controlled fabrication of metallic electrodes with atomic separation
US5315131A (en) Electrically reprogrammable nonvolatile memory device
JP4119950B2 (en) Electronic device capable of controlling conductance
JP5365829B2 (en) Switching element and manufacturing method thereof
Obermair et al. The Single-Atom Transistor: perspectives for quantum electronics on the atomic-scale
JP4118500B2 (en) Point contact array
Tamura et al. Switching property of atomic switch controlled by solid electrochemical reaction
US8399289B2 (en) Programmable polyelectrolyte electrical switches
Kozicki et al. Nanoscale effects in devices based on chalcogenide solid solutions
Tamura et al. Material dependence of switching speed of atomic switches made from silver sulfide and from copper sulfide
Banno et al. Solid-electrolyte nanometer switch
WO2023131586A1 (en) Fully metallic atomic-scale tin transistors with ultralow power dissipation
Barczewski INT-Research-The Single-Atom Transistor
Xiexs et al. Configuring a bistable atomic switch by repeated electrochemical cycling
Zhang et al. Quantized current conduction in memristors and its physical model
Obermair et al. Single-atom transistors: switching an electrical current with individual atoms
Xie et al. Single-Atom Transistors: Atomic-scale Electronic Devices in Experiment and Simulation
JPH1065145A (en) Conductive atomic-size thin wire and atomic size switch

Legal Events

Date Code Title Description
FEPP Fee payment procedure

Free format text: PAT HOLDER NO LONGER CLAIMS SMALL ENTITY STATUS, ENTITY STATUS SET TO UNDISCOUNTED (ORIGINAL EVENT CODE: STOL); ENTITY STATUS OF PATENT OWNER: LARGE ENTITY

STCF Information on status: patent grant

Free format text: PATENTED CASE

SULP Surcharge for late payment
AS Assignment

Owner name: PAPST LICENSING GMBH CO. KG, GERMANY

Free format text: ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST;ASSIGNORS:SCHIMMEL, THOMAS;XIE, FANGQING;OBERMAIR, CHRISTIAN;SIGNING DATES FROM 20100604 TO 20100614;REEL/FRAME:029144/0392

AS Assignment

Owner name: PAPST LICENSING GMBH CO. KG, GERMANY

Free format text: CORRECTIVE ASSIGNMENT TO CORRECT THE CITY FOR THE ADDRESS OF ASSIGNEE. CORRECT NAME OF THE CITY IS ST. GEORGEN. PREVIOUSLY RECORDED ON REEL 029144 FRAME 0392. ASSIGNOR(S) HEREBY CONFIRMS THE CITY NAME WAS INCORRECT AS GEORGEN, GERMANY.;ASSIGNORS:SCHIMMEL, THOMAS;XIE, FANGQING;OBERMAIR, CHRISTIAN;SIGNING DATES FROM 20100604 TO 20100614;REEL/FRAME:029217/0808

FPAY Fee payment

Year of fee payment: 4

MAFP Maintenance fee payment

Free format text: PAYMENT OF MAINTENANCE FEE, 8TH YEAR, LARGE ENTITY (ORIGINAL EVENT CODE: M1552); ENTITY STATUS OF PATENT OWNER: LARGE ENTITY

Year of fee payment: 8

REFU Refund

Free format text: REFUND - PAYMENT OF MAINTENANCE FEE, 8TH YEAR, LARGE ENTITY (ORIGINAL EVENT CODE: R1552); ENTITY STATUS OF PATENT OWNER: LARGE ENTITY

FEPP Fee payment procedure

Free format text: MAINTENANCE FEE REMINDER MAILED (ORIGINAL EVENT CODE: REM.); ENTITY STATUS OF PATENT OWNER: LARGE ENTITY